Roughly half of black Protestants and white Evangelicals believe that creation is purely for human benefit. It may be added that they start with the most dignified part of this crown of creation , viz.
On land and in sea the animal creation chase and maim, and slay and devour each other. She is still inspiring the unfinished work of creation , and her delight is with the children of men. And the Earth was without form, and void; and darkness was upon the face of the deep.
And the Spirit of God moved upon the face of the waters. Genesis also gives another account of the Creation, in which God makes Adam out of clay, prepares the Garden of Eden for him, and then fashions Eve out of Adam's rib.
Since made is a past form of make, it will depict those things that have already available. It can also be used in a unique sense as well. Like your clothes are Italian-made. This hyphen connects two words. Made can be described as forming particular material from raw materials available. There could be many other examples of make and made both as they are similar yet different in the way that the first one is either not started or in progress and the latter one is finished.
The synonyms of made could be constructed, manufacture, enact, compile, lay down , pass, establish, draw up, institute, draft, compose, found, devise, prepare, concoct, dish up, fix, brew, mash, mast, etc. Some antonyms could be destroyed, lose, repeal, miss, etc. Create and made are two sides of the coin.
Similar to each other but different in meaning. Creating something means when you put your efforts into making, produce, or invent something new, something odd, something different. Yes, create is way similar to many other words, but every word has a unique and different aspect.
Made means putting two and two together in most of the cases. She creates a friendly and welcoming atmosphere for her guests. The advertisements are intended to create demand for the product. I've been creating music for over 30 years. She enjoys creating new dishes by combining unusual ingredients. Full Definition of create Entry 1 of 2. Definition of create Entry 2 of 2.
Synonyms for create Synonyms: Verb beget , breed , bring , bring about , bring on , catalyze , cause , do , draw on , effect , effectuate , engender , generate , induce , invoke , make , occasion , produce , prompt , result in , spawn , translate into , work , yield Visit the Thesaurus for More. Examples of create in a Sentence Verb Several new government programs were created while she was governor.
It can be hard to create a balance between work and family. Recent Examples on the Web: Verb Eventually, the ground under Oak Flat will subside and create a crater about 1, feet deep and nearly 2 miles across. First Known Use of create Verb 14th century, in the meaning defined at transitive sense 1 Adjective 15th century, in the meaning defined above. The shape and structure of an object. The body or outward appearance of a person or an animal considered separately from the face or head; figure.
To give form to; shape: form clay into figures. To develop in the mind; conceive: form an opinion. Ok, remember, we are doing this as a literalist, and you have me to walk you along and explain every step of the way, lets do this: Genesis - This verse is clear, God created brought into existence the earth and the heavens.
Genesis - This verse is key to solving your "mystery" In this verse, we come across two problems with the earth after the initial foundation of the earth is created.
Notice how it is clear here, with the word void, that it had nothing in it. It was not filled at this time. Genesis - " God made the beast of the earth" Genesis - " God said, Let us make man in our image, after our likeness No where in this chapter has anything been "formed" yet. Now onto the "controversey". The second chapter.
Notice the first five verses are an account of what was created in the first chapter. After this account, no longer is the word created or made used in Chapter 2, until the creation of the woman is gone into more detail. This must mean, that something else is happening. We are not having everything created again, which is the reason for the wording change. Remeber, "the earth was without form; and void". No controversey here, unless you want to take the Bible out of context, in a non-literal way.
So a person has to speak English to understand the Bible and gain entrance to Heaven? Most literalists I'm aware of, including myself, believe that the Bible is word-for-word exact only in the originals. I also believe that God preserves the meaning of His revelation through all translations, but translation by its nature cannot render a perfect word-for-word meaning from one language to another.
There are too many differences between languages. I do think the original King James had a lot going for it: A great number of great scholars who were also spiritually fine Christians did the translating and they had a huge array of texts to work from, in many different languages including earlier English texts, other European languages, Middle Eastern languages, Roman of course, as well as Hebrew and Greek.
I still think the KJV is the best to date, but its archaic language has to be continually updated. The Bible has to be read in the language people actually speak or it's useless.
Had my suspicions. I agree with the people here who say that using an English translation for the particular analysis you chooose is highly questionable. What if the choice were an arbitrary or stylistic choice made by the translator or translators? Or if the Hebrew used more than two words? The difference you are trying to find is to subtle to be reliably detected in translations.
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